Archive for blogger

Blogger Challenges Abercrombie’s ‘Skinny’ Image

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Abercrombie & Fitch's small sizes aren't stopping this blogger from taking a stand when it comes to the public image of plus-size women

Jes, known on the Internet as The Militant Baker, recreated popular topless A&F ads, but with her own twist — adding the tagline "Attractive & Fat." She published the images on her blog along with an open letter to the retailer's CEO Michael Jeffries

Jeffries and A&F recently came under public scrutiny for comments made in a Business Insider article, published earlier this month. The story claimed that the stores do not stock XL clothing sizes because the CEO "doesn't want larger people shopping in the store." Read more...

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Becoming a Blogger: Do You Have What it Takes?

Are you thinking of starting a blog or restarting your blog? Do you wonder if you have what it takes to attract a strong blog audience? To learn about what it takes to become a successful blogger, I interview Stanford Smith for this episode of the Social Media Marketing podcast. More About This Show The Social [...]

Social Network Usage Continues to Grow, But Facebook Draws Fewer Visitors

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Time spent on social networks nearly doubled on tablets over the past year and time spent overall also grew, but Facebook drew 4 percent fewer unique visitors, according to a Nielsen report.

Desktop users spent an average of 74 minutes a day on social networks in 2012, up from 60 in 2011. Users on smartphones spent just over five minutes using social networks this year, up marginally from 2011. Use on tablets spiked from 23 minutes in 2011 to 41 in 2012.

Among social services, Facebook saw most visitors by far, but usage fell 4 percent. Blogger took second place among social sites, though its usage also fell off slightly. The biggest gains were realized by Pinterest, with the number of visitors up by more than 1,000 percent among desktop Web and mobile app users and more than 4,000 percent among mobile Web users. Google+ and Tumblr also saw user numbers grow substantially. Foursquare’s mobile user base more than doubled.

LinkedIn user numbers were flat on desktop but doubled in mobile apps.

The Nielsen report also noted that the use of social services on mobile devices is transforming the way that viewers experience television programming.

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5 Ways to Go From Blogger to Published Book Author

social media how toDo you blog? Are you thinking of publishing a book?

Eighty-one percent of the US population says they want to write a book.

Not surprisingly, only about two percent ever actually do it.

Most bloggers, on the other hand, write a ton of books—probably three or four books per year on average, but most of them don’t ever realize they’ve done so.

Later—sometimes much later—they realize they’re sitting on a ton of content that could be turned into a book.

Many make the mistake of not bothering to consciously write a book. They just blog.

Here’s a better way: Plan out the content for a book, then write the book in post-sized bits every day and publish the posts—the book—on your blog.

When you blog a book, you produce both a manuscript and a fan base that avidly reads your blog and may eventually also purchase the final product: your printed or digital book.

How to Become an Author AND a Blogger

Each time you hit the Publish button on your blog, you publish your work. That means you become a publisher. But you haven’t produced a book, which means you’re not an author. Nor have you become a successful author.

If you’re a businessperson, keep in mind that a book is the best business card you can ever hand a potential client or customer.

A book makes you an author expert—an authority in your field. Your blog also elevates you into the realm of thought leader and expert. Thus, by blogging and by blogging a book or booking a blog, you boost your business.

publish

Bloggers are publishers, but not necessarily authors of books. They can blog books or book blogs and become authors as well as bloggers. Image source: iStockPhoto.

There are five ways you can use your blog to turn yourself into the successful author of a book.

#1: Blog a Book

With this method, you treat the content you produce on your blog much like you would if you were writing a book from scratch

  • Choose a blog topic based on marketability and competition in both the blogosphere and the bookstore.
  • Then schedule your content carefully based on a plan that fills each chapter of your book in post-sized bits (250-500 words).
  • Also create a promotion plan that includes social media as well as traditional media—your blog serves as the centerpiece of that plan. Author Michael Stelzner (and founder of this site) wrote a great post about how to promote a book using social media. You might want to add some of his suggestions to your plan.

    mike post on book promo

    The best ways to promote yourself and your book is via social media, but blogging provides the pivot point for your promotion plan.

  • Write and post consistently (2-7 times per week or more).
  • Promote your blog to build the fan base—the author platform, as it is called in the publishing world—necessary to create a successful blog, and subsequently a successful book; one that sells to readers and publishers.

Since you’ll be creating a book on your blog, here are some important steps for blogging a book:

  • Set up categories based on your chapters. Don’t use creative names; use searchable terms or keyword phrases.
  • Create a page for a table of contents. I have a widget on the right sidebar of my of my blog that directs readers to the table of contents of the original blogged book.  When the book was being blogged, it helped readers find the table of contents and read from the beginning of the book.
    table of contents home page

    Since How to Blog a Book is both a book and a blog now, this box, which appears on the blog, directs readers to the table of contents for the blogged book.

    When you click through, you land on this page:

    table of contents page

    By looking at my table of contents, you can see how I "built" the first draft of my book a post at a time. Each entry is a link to a post. Each post represents one small piece of the book. (I posted 3-4 times per week and produced a 26,300-word first draft in 5 months.)

  • Create a way for readers to turn pages. Either have “previous post” and “next post” links at the bottom or use a plugin that allows readers to “turn the page.” For the first draft of my blogged book, I created these links manually, and they looked like this:

    previous post next post

    Creating this navigation system requires some extra manual work on the blogger's part—remember to do it each time you post.

  • Now I use a WordPress plugin called Single Post Navigation. The arrows are huge and scroll up and down the page as you read.

    single post navigation

    These arrows (above the red arrows) follow the reader and are extremely easy to use. They only appear when you click through to individual posts and then begin navigating from post to post.

  • Be prepared to continue blogging on your topic when the book is complete. Your blog lives on even when you finish the book, so have a content plan that extends beyond that last page.

#2: Blog a Short Book (a series)

If the thought of blogging a full-length book still feels overwhelming, produce a short book. Using the same steps as above, plan out a series of posts on a topic, and then write and publish them on your blog over the course of 10-30 days.

Darren Rowse of Problogger (the blog and the book) did this successfully with his series, 31 Days to Build a Better Blog. It’s now his best-selling ebook.

I blogged a 10-day series on one of my blogs, As the Spirit Moves Me, and produced a book, 10 Days and 10 Ways to Return to Your Best Self.

blog series turned into books

Both of these products were created from a short blogged series.

To blog a short book, find a topic that solves a problem, answers a question or in some way adds value to your readers’ lives. Do this with a short or a long book, and you will produce a winner every time as well.

To blog a short book:

  • Make a content plan for the period of time you want to cover.
  • Write your posts on schedule.
  • Publish that content on your blog.
  • Create interest for the series using social media.
  • Edit the series and package it as an ebook or printed book.

In some cases, as in Darren’s, you might find your readers asking for a really great series to be produced as a book. But you can reproduce that result many times on your blog, and become a multiple-book author.

#3: Book Your Blog

To book a blog, create a content plan (this time for a full-length book) out of repurposed blog posts. However, rather than writing your posts from scratch, search out existing blog posts to fill your chapters.

Here are a few tips for creating a winning booked blog:

  • Book a blog worth reading, not the book you happened to blog. Not every blog contains a book. Make sure yours does before you publish it.
  • Edit and revise the manuscript you create. Make sure your book flows, makes sense, isn’t disjointed and contains all of the necessary content.
  • Add new content. This will entice your regular blog readers (and possibly a publisher) to purchase the book.
blog to book deals

The majority of blog-to-book deals have been booked blogs, such as the books above.

#4: Blog Your Way to a Book Deal

You can blog a book—or just blog—with the intention of attracting a literary agent or a publisher. Publishing professionals troll the blogosphere (and social networks) looking for successful bloggers. To them, a successful blog represents a thoroughly test-marketed book idea, as close to a sure bet as they can get when they decide to invest in a new author.

A successful blog, one with lots of readers, acts like a beacon to agents and publishers. When they follow the light—the trail of readers—to your blog, they have what they want: numbers. Wow them with your unique visitors and page views.

If your numbers aren’t as large as you’d like (or they’d like), at least show growth month to month. Google Analytics tends to be the most accurate measure of these numbers, but your hosting company probably has analytics as well, and these can prove more impressive.

site analytics

This is what one part of your site analytics might look like from your hosting company. Publishers will be most interested in your unique visitors and page views.

#5: Blog Your Way to a Successful Self-Published Book

The work you’ve done to build readership will help you succeed as an author even if you don’t land a traditional publishing deal.

A successful blog offers you the platform—the fan base—you need to successfully self-publish.

Your blog readers will gladly purchase a digital or printed book based on their favorite blog and written by their favorite blogger. Give them a souvenir to take home. They’ll be happy to do so.

And guess what? Your name will be on the cover. You’ll have moved into the two percent. You’ll have become an author.

What do you think? Do you plan to become an author by blogging a book or booking a blog? Have you blogged a book or booked a blog already? Leave me a comment in the box below.

Image from iStockPhoto.

Questions That Empower Bloggers – 10 Essentials

What is your motive in writing? To prospective bloggers, if you can answer this, the other issues fall into place and are relatively easy.

What’s the Secret Formula to Blogging Anyway?

A blogger plays by the SEO and keyword rules. A good blogger couples careful research with an engaging topic with their opinion included in the mix. And a great blogger knows how to mix all of these with a fierce writing skill set and voice that gets you all hot and bothered while reading – and ready to come back for more.

Study: Google Ads More Effective Than Facebook | Social Media-Sex Connection? | Flickr Rolls Out New Photo Layout

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Study: Google Ads Work Better Than Facebook’s (Boston Herald)
Facebook may be this week’s stock market darling, but when it comes to online display advertising, search engine Google provides advertisers with “significantly more value” than the social media giant in terms of growth rates, performance, targeting options and formats, according to a study released Tuesday. The study compares the value of Facebook advertising to Google’s Display Network. PC Magazine Facebook moved quickly — again — to address concerns that it wasn’t doing enough to satisfy mobile users, buying the developers of the Lightbox Android photo app. However, the company also made it clear that Facebook was not acquiring the company or the photos that users had stored on the Lightbox website, just the developer team. AdAge General Motors said Tuesday that it is “reassessing” its spending on Facebook advertising — about $10 million — but “remains committed” to the social network as part of “an aggressive content strategy with all our products and brands.” Meanwhile, Scott Monty, Ford’s head of social media, said that the automaker is bullish about Facebook ads — particularly “sponsored stories” that contain a social layer — and intends to “accelerate” spending on them. AllFacebook Facebook followed up last week’s introduction of its app center with two new metrics to its insights for applications: app ratings and negative feedback. The new app ratings dashboard will bring developers information on how users rated their apps with the five-star ratings system Facebook recently implemented. The negative feedback feature shows developers how many times stories from their apps have been hidden or reported as spam, as well as how many times the app itself has been blocked. Mashable Two Colombian criminals almost got away with robbing an Internet cafe, but one of them checked Facebook first — and ended up being identified and arrested because he forgot to log out. The two men whipped out guns at the cash register to demand money and made a clean getaway on a motorcycle. After the men escaped, an employee at the cafe called the police turning in information from the Facebook page that led to his arrest. continued…

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How Social Media Has Changed Brand Engagement

As I've rebranded and relocated the ol' blog, I took a look at the evolution of social media from 2007 to today. So, hop in the ol' DeLorean and take a look at how far we've come!

26 Tips for Writing Great Blog Posts

social media how toDo you blog? Feel like you’re trying to reinvent the wheel time and again?

Looking for some ideas to simplify your content creation process?

What follows are 26 tips, from A-Z, to help you create optimal blog posts every time you sit down to write.

#1: Anatomically Correct

A blog post contains several areas that require our attention and care. Pamela Seiple refers to six parts of the anatomy of a lead-generating blog post:

  • Eye-catching title
  • In-text links to landing pages
  • Sidebar/banner calls to action
  • Social sharing buttons
  • Call to action at the bottom
  • Relevancy—making sure the post is relevant from top to bottom
blog anatomy

Parts of the blog anatomy.

more anatomical parts to include in your blog posts

Example of more anatomical parts to include in your blog posts.

#2: Blogging Platform

By knowing the ins and outs of your blogging platform, you’ll ensure that your posts look as good as they can. Take the time to master the visual editor (or raw HTML, if you prefer) so that you know how to format a post, insert an image and embed a video or podcast.

Whether you’re working in platforms such as WordPress, Tumblr or Posterous, it’s good to stay up to date on the features and new versions.

If you’re not comfortable with the more technical aspects of blogging, try to find someone who can be a resource for you to answer questions as they arise.

WordPress' editor

WordPress' editor where you can toggle between visual and HTML editing functions.

#3: Categories

Whether your new blog post is a stand-alone article or part of a series you’re writing, it should fit into your blog categories as well as your overall corporate content strategy. Meaning that you want to stay on topic and have your posts fit into the categories you’ve established.

For example, HubSpot has nine categories on their blog. Posts are written to fit in with each of these categories. Writing about category topics such as analytics, blogging, email marketing, HubSpot TV, etc., allows both readers and writers to stay focused on what they can expect to see on HubSpot’s blog.

When you choose your categories, ask yourself, do they make sense, and do they fit into the objectives of my business? Having clearly defined blog categories will help you continue generating meaningful content and topics for your blog.

blog categories

Write posts that fit into your categories.

#4: Description

Most search engines will use a maximum of 160 characters for your post description on their results pages. If you don’t create a meta-description (defined as a “…concise summary of your page’s content”), a search engine will often take the first 160 characters it finds on your page instead.

Note too, that when you create a meta-description that is fewer than 160 characters, you’ll see the full description in the search engine. Otherwise it will be cut off.

example of a meta-description

An example of a meta-description created within the All-In-One SEO Pack plugin in WordPress.

example of how a post's description appears in Google search results

An example of how a post's description appears in Google search results with and without the meta-description.

#5: Editorial Calendar

Bloggers find editorial calendars helpful for scheduling and organizing topics for posts. Some people use their calendars to track more elaborate details.

Michele Linn suggests using specific tabs in a spreadsheet to track info for each post such as: post date, author, tentative title, keywords, categories, tags, call to action and status. She says “By tracking more than topic and date it will help to make sure the key elements you need for SEO, digital optimization and conversion are accounted for.”

Download a sample editorial calendar worksheet.

example of a template for a master editorial calendar

An example of a template for a master editorial calendar as shown by Michele Linn.

#6: Fine-Tune and Revise

Like other forms of writing, a blog post is rarely completed in one draft. Many writers find it helpful to take a post through several revisions and fine-tune the post as you go along. Check grammar, spelling and punctuation, and make certain that all of your links are working.

#7: Guidelines for Writing for Search Engines

By following a few tips and best practices, you can increase the chance that your blog post will be found by search engines—by Google in particular.

The State University of New York at Plattsburgh offers these helpful writing tips:

  • Google likes text
  • Google likes formatting
  • Google likes freshness
  • Google likes accessibility
  • Google likes outbound hyperlinks
  • Googlebot isn’t psychic, so remember to link your pages
  • Google likes you to tell it where you are
  • Google likes experts

#8: Headings

Joost de Valk offers some good suggestions regarding blog headings. He writes, “The heading structure of your pages is one of the very important aspects of on-page SEO. It defines which parts of your content are important, and how they’re interconnected. Because they have different goals, a single post needs another heading structure than your blog’s homepage or your category archives.”

He offers five basic principles about heading structure:

  • The most important heading on the page should be the H1
  • There is usually only one H1 on any page
  • Subheadings should be H2s, sub-subheadings should be H3s, etc.
  • Each heading should contain valuable keywords; if not, it’s a wasted heading
  • For longer pieces of content, a heading is what helps a reader skip to the parts that he/she finds interesting
headings

Headings should contain valuable keywords.

#9: Images

Blog posts are made up of more than words and headings.

Judy Dunn recommends five ways the right photo can increase readership and blog views:

  • Convey the overall feeling or emotion of your post
  • Illustrate a metaphor or analogy that is part of your main idea
  • Evoke surprise or curiosity
  • Complement your headline
  • Make your reader smile

Judy points out too that readers are visual learners and images can help people take in and retain information better.

#10: Journalistic Approach

Bloggers can learn a lot from traditional journalists and the ways that they approach their news stories.

Mickie Kennedy offers five things that bloggers can learn from journalists:

  • Get your facts straight
  • Trust has to be earned
  • Give credit to your sources
  • The inverted pyramid works (basic overview in first paragraph and then delve into more details in subsequent paragraphs)
  • Editing and proofreading are essential
inverted pyramid

As shown on Wikipedia.org

#11: Killer SEO and Blog Design

Cyrus Shepard makes an important case for having a beautiful blog. He says, “…the overall design of your site is the first thing visitors see and it significantly influences bounce rate, page views and conversions.”

Cyrus suggests that certain elements on the page will add to a blog’s success:

  • Search box
  • RSS feed
  • Breadcrumbs (helping users navigate),
  • Flat site architecture by minimizing the number of clicks it takes to reach your content
  • Images
  • Keep your best content above the fold
  • Link to your best content
  • Don’t overdo links
  • Watch ad space
  • Encourage comments
  • Add sharing buttons
  • Test the blog for speed
  • Check your blog in different browsers
  • Pick a powerhouse blogging platform (e.g., WordPress, Posterous, Tumblr)

For a resource that will help remind you of these killer SEO suggestions, check out Cyrus’ infographic, Blog Design for Killer Search Engine Optimization.

#12: Lists

Lists have become a very popular type of blog post.

Nate Riggs offers three types for bloggers to consider: brief, detailed and hybrid lists.

The brief list has little description but can entice readers to bookmark the post to use the list as a resource down the road or to share it across their own networks.

In a detailed list, each bullet is a complete thought and serves as a good way to communicate complex information.

The hybrid list combines the elements of short and detailed lists, often with descriptive narratives or explanations in paragraphs between the actual lists.

Nate’s post has a lot of useful information about lists as a powerful content marketing tactic and is a good example of a hybrid list.

#13: Metrics for Blogging

Magdalena Georgieva identifies five metrics to keep an eye on to know how your blogging is going: visitors, leads, subscribers, inbound links and social media shares.

As Magdalena says, “Measure the performance of your business blog regularly to identify weaknesses in the content you’re producing, what topics your audience truly cares about, and what blogging tactics work for you.”

When you find topics and approaches that work particularly well, try to replicate those efforts and be willing to let go of features that aren’t performing well. Magdalena recommends looking at your five most successful blog posts and asking, “What do they have in common?”

#14: Names, Titles and Bio

Not only are readers interested in the content in your blog post, they also want to know who wrote the post and their role at your organization.

Sometimes you’ll come across a thoroughly researched and well-written post only to find an attribution of “admin.” Even if the blog is only written by you and you’re the administrator of the blog, be sure to include your name, title and a way for readers to contact you.

#15: Original vs. Curated Content

The type of post you write can contain completely original content or can consist of content that you’ve curated.

Pamela Seiple addresses the issue of curated content and makes an important point when she says, “There’s a misconception among marketers that curated content is lazy and unoriginal, but we think it’s the complete opposite. It takes time and careful evaluation to create quality curated content and the result is oftentimes a very valuable piece of content that helps people seeking information on a given topic to cut through the clutter on the web and save time.”

The 26 tips series here on Social Media Examiner is an example of curated posts, pulling in the expertise of others who have written on the topic. As a curator of this kind of post, I love the journey of the research and find it especially rewarding to see the content pulled together in a way that hadn’t been previously available. Curated posts can be incredibly gratifying!

#16: Publish and Promote

Kristi Hines speaks about the publishing and promoting stages of creating a successful blog post. Kristi says that one thing you want to do during the publishing stage is to ensure that your post has some kind of call to action. “Think about what you want people to do once they’ve read the post….”

Promoting a blog post can involve a fair amount of thought and strategy, as you’ll see from Kristi’s approach. She has a different plan in place for “averagely awesome posts, awesome posts and killer awesome posts.”

What differs for the three types of posts is how many social networks she shares the posts with, whether she includes the post in her writing portfolio and whether it’s included in her custom RSS feed or utilizes blog commenting promotion and direct messaging partners in social media to see if they’ll help spread the word.

Kristi describes promotion as taking from a few minutes to a few hours, and recommends taking the time to build a good foundation before you expect to execute a successful blog promotion.

#17: Questions

What are you going to write about post after post, week after week, year after year? Sometimes thinking about content for your blog can seem daunting.

Lee Odden offers a great piece of advice: “One particularly effective way to get content ideas for blogging comes from reviewing web analytics for the kinds of questions people type into search engines like Google or Bing that deliver visitors.”

In one example, Lee said that he noticed that numerous visitors each month were typing in the question “What does a community manger do?” and search engines were sending them to one of his posts about that topic. He used it as an opportunity to explore other related questions about social community managers and providing content in the form of answers.

What questions are your web visitors asking before they arrive on your pages? How can you maximize your content to answer readers’ questions?

#18: Research

Well-researched blog posts can differentiate your content from your competitors’. Being known as a go-to source in your industry will help make your blog stand out. Where do you go to research posts?

I find that utilizing a variety of sources helps me gather the information I’m seeking.

For example, while I can often find a lot of useful content via web-based searches, sometimes there’s nothing like a visit to the library or a bookstore where I often will discover a helpful book on the shelf that I wouldn’t have known existed if I hadn’t been standing there physically eyeballing them.

Oli Gardner makes a good case for using social media research for your blog posts. He suggests ten social media research strategies:

#19: Stand Out

When you’ve been blogging in a competitive marketplace for a while, chances are good that you’ll see other bloggers writing on topics similar to yours. It doesn’t mean that you have to stay away from the topic completely; rather you can use it as an opportunity to see what worked and didn’t work in their post and write yours in a way that will help you to stand out in the topic area.

By reading the comments on similar blog posts, you will get a great view of what questions and thoughts people had after reading the post and you can take a slightly different angle by making sure you cover those areas in your article.

#20: Title

How important is the title of your blog post? Simply put, very important!

Brian Clark writes that the title is the first, and perhaps only, impression you make on a prospective reader.

He says, “Without a headline or post title that turns a browser into a reader, the rest of your words may as well not even exist.

But a headline can do more than simply grab attention. A great headline can also communicate a full message to its intended audience, and it absolutely must lure the reader into your body text.”

example of an eye-catching title

An example of an eye-catching title from copyblogger.com.

#21: User-Centered Content

Possibly one of the worst mistakes a blog post can make is missing the mark of its readers, forgetting who they are and their needs and interests.

Georgy Cohen goes as far as to say that content can serve as customer service and that to be helpful, content should be user-focused (asking what our users’ problems and priorities are), communicated clearly and presented in succinct language.

#22: Valuable Content

In the perfect blogging world, creating valuable content would be at the top of every blogger’s list for their post objectives.

While our definitions about valuable content may vary, Ahava Leibtag has created a very helpful step-by-step checklist that reminds us to ask five questions:

  • Can the user find the content
  • Can the user read the content
  • Can the user understand the content
  • Will the user want to take action
  • Will the user share the content

She suggests:

  • Findable content includes: an H1 tag; at least two H2 tags; metadata including title, descriptors and keywords; links to other related content; alt tags for images.
  • Readable content includes: an inverted-pyramid writing style, chunking, bullets, numbered lists, following the style guide.
  • Understandable content includes: an appropriate content type (text, video), indication that you considered the users’ persona, context, respect for the users’ reading level, articulating an old idea in a new way.
  • Actionable content includes: a call to action, a place to comment, an invitation to share, links to related content, a direct summary of what to do.
  • Shareable content includes: something to provoke an emotional response, a reason to share, a request to share, an easy way to share, personalization.

Download the checklist for future reference.

valuable content checklist

Ahava Leibtag's Valuable Content Checklist.

#23: Word Count

How many words should you have in your blog post? Some blogs have set parameters for optimal length and put a value on whether a post is short or long.

Corey Eridon has an interesting perspective on word count and suggests that focusing on blog word count might not be as important as you think it is. “Some topics take 100 words to explain, some take 1,000, and that’s okay.”

Corey suggests that writers focus instead on whether posts are optimized for mobile, use effective formatting, communicate in a clear manner and that outlining the points you want to cover may ultimately be a better use of your time and energy.

If you’re restricted to shorter posts by the parameters set up in advance for your blog, then you could also follow Corey’s advice to link to longer-form content you’ve developed around the topic.

Bottom line: Don’t let the quantity of words dictate the quality of your post.

#24: (E)xcerpt

On the heels of our discussion about blog word count, a shorter blog post can also be an excerpt or summary of what readers will find in your longer-form content—e.g., eBook or white paper—but it needn’t be restricted to words.

You can also use an excerpt of the transcript or a brief description to demonstrate what information the users will learn if they watch your video or listen to your podcast.

great excerpts

Mike Stelzner provides great excerpts from his expert interviews on Social Media Examiner.

#25: Your Story

Readers like to get to know how writers tick and often appreciate hearing a few personal details and insights from the person who has taken them on a journey through a post. While business blogs shouldn’t be thought of as personal journal entries, you can tell your readers a little bit about how you operate.

For example, I stated above that writing curated posts like the 26 tips series here on Social Media Examiner is one of my favorite types of posts to write. (Truth be told, curated posts are also some of my favorite types to read.)

In the description of “research” above, I also shared how research is one of my favorite parts of blogging and how I enjoy researching both online and offline by doing the footwork of visiting libraries and bookstores in search of materials.

What parts of yourself are you willing and able to share with your readers?

#26: Zone for Writing

Ideas for blog posts come at all times—when you’re driving in your car, sitting at your desk, and yes, even in the middle of the night!

Chances are good though that the actual writing of the post will happen in multiple drafts and revisions, and depending on how you work, it may take place over a period of days.

What can be helpful is to create a time and place where you can get into the zone for writing and allow yourself to go with it, with as few interruptions as possible.

What do you think? How do you keep your blog posts consistent and dynamic? What tips would you add? Leave your questions and comments in the box below.

Social Media: Class Presentation

Part of a Web 2.0/Social Media presentation for an Intro to Communication class at Marquette University. Featuring Tim Cigelske, Marquette Communications Specialist, founder of Teecycle.org and blogger for the Beer Runner on Draft Magazine online.
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